Sand wrote:
Exclavius wrote:
Sand wrote:
Exclavius wrote:
You two, were ones I figured would take that view of the question.
Thank you for your input, the separation of "self" and "one's thoughts" is one of the issues I'm getting at.
Where is the separation?
I'm not saying there is one... perhaps better wording is whether extant thoughts control the inflow/acceptance of new thoughts or new thoughts control the fate of extant thoughts. (or which controls the other more)
You seem to be saying older thoughts are more associated with a person than incoming ones which may have some validity but does that mean one cannot have older thoughts about things one does not accept? The word "thoughts" is simply too vague in this context to have much meaning.
This line of thinking, that i've recently been on is a result of me trying to figure out a way to purge old thoughts, specifically beliefs, that I've since rejected, and their residual effect is creating too much cognitive dissonance. I can't seem to rid myself of some things that I want to rid myself of.
Most theory of the mind states that once a thought is taken in, it can never be disposed of, it just sits there, filed away until such time as sufficient reason to accept it comes around. So what happens to a thought that was once accepted, but no longer is. Is it in a way, still accepted, and always WILL BE accepted, even if we tell ourselves otherwise.
Is there any way to "un-accept" a thought?
The ambiguity of the word thought... how about I say meme? I wanted to avoid the word, but it IS what i mean.